The death of a client does not bring an end to estate planning. Rather, post-mortem estate planning allows practitioners and beneficiaries to proactively shape the way an estate is treated for income, estate and gift tax purposes, and the way property is distributed. Through the use of a wide variety of elections, planners can respond to changed law and factual circumstances, errors in planning, and help reduce the tax liability of the estate. There are also crucial post-mortem choices to be made about a decedent’s retirement assets. This program will provide you with a practical guide to the many interrelated post-mortem planning choices available to planners, administrators and beneficiaries. This live replay was originally presented on December 14, 2012.*

*Please Note: Attorneys may not receive credit for viewing the same program more than once within a 12 month period.)

Robert Keebleris a partner with Keebler & Associates, LLP in Green Bay, Wisconsin, where hispractice includes family wealth transfer and preservation planning, charitable giving, retirement distribution planning, and estate administration. He frequently represents clients before the National Office of the IRS in the private letter ruling process and in estate, gift and income tax examinations and appeals. CPA Magazine has named Mr. Keebler one of the Top 100 Most Influential Practitioners in the United States and one of the Top 40 Tax Advisors to Know During a Recession. Mr. Keebler received his B.A., cum laude, from Lakeland College and his Master of Taxation from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.